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Let's Feast!

Welcome to Week 47 of 52 Healthy Habits 2020 Edition!  

How are you doing on your healthy habits? Is there a week that you are still stuck on? Reach out to me if you're struggling and need help. Don't worry if you aren't ready to move on to this week's habit. Stick with the habit that you really need to keep working on until it becomes a habit. 

For some of you, unfortunately, Thanksgiving has been cancelled. But for others that can safely get together with loved ones, these tips are for you:
 

In just a few days, families all over America will be sitting down to a meal which looks back to that first Thanksgiving in which the Pilgrims commemorated the harvest after a harsh winter.  The year was 1621, and Governor William Bradford proclaimed a day of thanksgiving, which the colonists celebrated as a traditional English harvest feast.

George Washington declared Thanksgiving a holiday in 1789, and in 1941 Congress passed a resolution which decreed that the holiday should fall on the fourth Thursday of November.

Feasting together is as old as the human race.  It is a way of celebrating and enjoying time with family and friends.  But if we are not careful, we can overdo the festivities and end up setting ourselves back over the Thanksgiving holiday weekend.
 

Just how big is your meal?


It’s hard to believe, but the average Thanksgiving meal contains 3,000 calories and 229 grams of fat.  And most of us don’t limit ourselves to one indulgent meal.  It’s typical to snack and celebrate all day long! 
 
The trouble comes when we have to deal with those extra calories that we have packed into our bodies:

“A 160 lb. person would have to run at a moderate pace for four hours, swim for five hours or walk 30 miles to burn off a 3,000-calorie Thanksgiving Day meal,” said Dr. Cedric Bryant, ACE chief exercise physiologist.  Many people start by snacking throughout the day and that combined with the meal can lead to a total caloric intake of 4,500.”
 

Tips for Turkey Day


The good news is that you don’t have to forgo your favorite holiday foods.  There is room for a little indulgence at a holiday feast!  The secret is to have a plan as we head into the holiday season.  By staying on top of both your calorie intake and your physical activity, you can enjoy your favorite foods in moderation and emerge on the other side just as fit as you are now.

Plan your meals.  If you know that you are going to be having some heavy, celebratory meals in the upcoming days, limit your intake at other meals to help keep your diet balanced out.  Don’t skip meals, but make them lighter and be sure to include plenty of healthy, lower calorie foods (especially foods like greens which are low calorie but full of fiber).  For instance, if you are going to have a big lunch, eat a smaller breakfast and dinner.
 
Look at the big picture.  Keep up with how you are eating during the several days surrounding Thanksgiving.  It’s not a good idea to indulge at every opportunity that presents itself.  If you splurge heavily one day, take it easy the next.
 
Keep moving.  The last thing you need this time of year is a slowed-down metabolism.  Staying active is a great way to give your body a fighting chance to negotiate the extra calories you will be consuming. Walking after a meal is also great for digestion...just go at a easy pace. 
 
To get the biggest bang for your exercise-buck, do regular strength training moves.  Even after your strength training session has ended, your metabolism and calorie-burn remains high when you do strength training! 
 
Here are some simple strengthening exercises you can do no matter where you are—whether in your office at work or at the in-laws:
1. Push-ups If you aren’t used to doing push-ups, start with your hands on a raised surface such as a desk or even a wall.  As you gain strength, you can gradually move to doing them fully on the floor.
2.  Lunges For extra credit, hold dumbbells or other heavy objects in your hands while lunging.
3.  Squats To do a proper squat, lower yourself just as though you are about to sit into a chair, then raise back up. You can also do these by literally sitting in a chair, placed directly behind you, and stand back up...without using your hands the whole time. Just make sure you don't "PLOP" down onto the chair. Lower yourself slowly, using your core, then push into your heels and use your core and quads to stand back up. 
4.  Step-ups Find the nearest step and with alternating legs, step onto the step with one leg then lower yourself back down.  Again, holding heavy objects in each hand will increase the effect. Also, the higher the step is the harder it makes it.

There is no need to pack on the pounds this Thanksgiving.  Figure out your strategy now, and then when the festivities start, just work the plan!
 
http://www.acefitness.org/pressroom/392/hard-to-believe-average-thanksgiving-meal-equals-3
 
Reply to this email or post in our  Facebook Group with any questions you have and I will gladly help.

Here's my 2020 Gift Guide too if you're looking for unique gift ideas.


This week's email is sponsored by the following.**This email contains affiliate links and I will be compensated if you make a purchase after clicking on my links.



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Carrie A Groff

Your Accountability Partner and 52 Healthy Habits Coach
carriegroff@gmail.com


P.S. Don't forget to share in our Facebook Group

P.S.S. Did you know that it actually takes an average of 66 days to form a habit (not the social media 21 days statistic) and some habits take even longer! There was a study done for 84 days and the quickest forming habit did only take 20 days, which was drinking a glass of water after getting up, but other habits like eating a piece of fruit with lunch took twice as long; and the habit of 50 sit-ups after morning coffee was a habit that one participant couldn't form even after 84 days. Walking for 10 minutes after breakfast turned into a habit for another participant after 50 days. 

Previous Healthy Habits:

Week 1: Start with 1 Simple Healthy Habit

Week 2: Raise Your Heart Rate Daily

Week 3 - Take Your Vitamins 

Week 4 - Eat Your Greens

Week 5: Staying Home is the New Going Out

Week 6: Laughter is the Best Medicine

Week 7 - Ditch the Processed Foods

Week 8: Benefits of Deep Breathing

Week 9: Taking a Tech Break

Week 10: Choose Organic

Week 11: Healthy Sleep Habits

Week 12: For a Healthier Immune System - Limit Sugar

Week 13: Poor Posture = Poor Health

Week 14: Portion Portion Portion!

Week 15: Walk for Your Health (and Sanity)

Week 16: Regular Meal Times

Week 17: Toxic Chemicals at Home?

Week 18: Stretching and Mobility

Week 19: Don't Drink All Your Calories

Week 20: Top 9 Reasons to Lift Weights

Week 21: How Healthy is Your Home?

Week 22: Always Be Prepared

Week 23: Power of Positivity

Week 24: Shh..Listen to your body

Week 25: Breaking Bad...

Week 26: Beat the Heat

Week 27: Stop Dieting

Week 28: Healthy Restaurant Eating

Week 29: Morning Routine Benefits

Week 30: Love Your Body

Week 31: Take a Tech Break

Week 32: Get Outside

Week 33: Declutter for Better Health

Week 34: Stop Weighing Yourself

Week 35: Healthy Snacking

Week 36: Learn Something New Today

Week 37: Take a few Minutes to Relax

Week 38: Adrenal Fatigue?

Week 39: Cold & Flu Season

Week 40: No More Guilt

41: Diabeties is Scary

Week 42: Gut Health

Week 43: Connect in Real Life

Week 44: Eat Your Apple Pie

Week 45: Fuel Your Body

Week 46: Holiday Survival Guide
Copyright © 2020 Healthy, Fit & Barefoot, All rights reserved.


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